Providing Innovative Training and Technology for Law Enforcement

The ISACA Metropolitan New York Chapter is teaming up with Law Enforcement Alliance for Digital Evidence Response Inc. (LEADER), to assist the law enforcement community, prosecutors and their strategic partners combat all forms of crime through technology.

Justice and Protection for All...

L.E.A.D.E.R. is a not-for-profit corporation with the purpose of assisting the law enforcement community, prosecutors and their strategic partners to combat all forms of crime by leveraging data, digital evidence and digital intelligence.

Innovative Training

Community Support

We host national and regional investigative and digital evidence symposiums for law enforcement, prosecutors, their strategic partners and private industry participants to inform industry leaders about the latest criminal threats and tactics as well as establish law enforcement and private sector protocols for handling these incidents.

Strategic Relationships

LEADER possesses over 160 years of state and federal government service, law enforcement experience and service to the community through its participants. We have established a very successful track record dealing with every type of governmental and non-governmental entity, and will continue to strengthen these relationships to combat serious crime.

National Training Centers

As our mission evolves, we will establish new training centers for law enforcement, prosecutors, trial judges, and other agencies to deliver programs fighting domestic and international terrorism, human trafficking, financial crimes, child exploitation, and other serious crimes.

In September 2016, North Korean intelligence services stole a huge batch of classified US and South Korean military plans — including a plan to assassinate North Korea’s dictator Kim Jong Un and other top government officials.

The medical industry is the new No. 1 target for hackers. Almost all U.S. health care organizations have reported at least one cyberattack. The largest American hospital hacked this year was a 550-bed facility in Buffalo.

The U.S’ National Cyber Security Alliance found that 60 percent of small companies are unable to sustain their businesses over six months after a cyber attack. According to the Ponemon Institute, the average price for small businesses to clean up after their businesses have been hacked stands at $690,000; and, for middle market companies, it’s over $1 million.

An Ohio man has been indicted on felony charges of aggravated arson and insurance fraud. A key piece of evidence is data downloaded from his pacemaker, secured after detectives obtained a search warrant.